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Friday, March 30, 2012

Hunter Jumps

The hunter ring has a tendency not to use a large variety of jumps. In most cases, the courses consist of verticals and ramped oxers with lots of filler and big ground lines. In this post we'll take a quick look at what this means, and in the next post we'll look at the variety of jumps that you might find in the jumper ring.

The first hunter jump that we'll look at is the vertical. If you look at one head-on, it does appear that everything is on the same vertical plane:




If you look at the same jump from the side, however, you'll notice that the flower boxes in front of the jump actually give it more of a narrow ramped oxer shape. The ground line being so far in front of the jump and built up essentially makes it easier for the horse not to get deep to the jump and not to hit the rail while taking off. A truly vertical jump would require the horse to rock back more and take a rounder trajectory than the longer one encouraged by a ramped jump.





A hunter oxer also looks quite like an ordinary ramped oxer when you look at it head on:







From the side, you can see that the back rail is at least a hole higher than the front rail. With the addition of flower boxes in front of the jump, this actually creates a shape somewhere between an ordinary ramped oxer and a triple bar. This again creates a longer jump trajectory than you would see with an undecorated ramped oxer or a square oxer.





These jumps are designed to be ridden with minimal rider input, which is why they are so useful for the hunter ring. The ascending shapes mean that very little balancing is required in the ring to keep the horse's front end from hitting the rails, which allows the rider to stay quiet and make it look easy.

The great thing about the hunter ring is that since the jumps very rarely vary from this description, you can easily prepare for what you will meet in the show ring. If your horse tends to jump quite flat or long, you might want to practice more square oxers and truly vertical verticals at home because spending all your time jumping ramped fences at shows will only exacerbate the problem.


Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Something to Watch, Part Two

Last year I posted a link to the 2011 George Morris Horsemastership Clinic videos and I realized that I haven't yet posted the link to the 2012 clinic.

For anyone who is interested in viewing hours and hours of a free, top-notch clinic, click here:

George Morris 2012

Unfortunately, George Morris himself was unable to attend this year but the clinicians were as follows:

Day 1 - Flatwork with Anne Kursinski
Day 2 - Gymnastics with Kent Farrington
Day 3 - Flatwork/gymnastics with McLain Ward
Day 4 - Flatwork without stirrups with Beezie Madden
Day 5 - Team Jumping with the 2011 US Pan American Games Team

In addition, there were several excellent videos without the young riders, including the day 2 veterinary session with Dr. Tim Ober.

It's an excellent free series of videos to check out if you have the time!